BAILEY, COL0.MEDELLIN, COLOMBIA

October 01, 2006

CAZENOVIA, WIS.Neighbor: Teen bragged about school trouble A student charged in the shooting death of his school principal was a normal teenager but often bragged about getting into trouble, a neighbor said Saturday. Eric Hainstock, 15, told police he gunned down Weston Schools Principal John Klang before classes began Friday because he was upset with a reprimand Klang had given him about having tobacco, according to a criminal complaint charging him with first-degree intentional homicide. The teen was also upset because he felt teachers didn't intervene to stop students who harassed him, the complaint said. Alan Hahn, 50, said Saturday he has known the Hainstocks for nearly a decade, and sometimes gave Eric a ride home from school. He said the teen enjoyed demolition derbies, racing a remote-control car on the country roads around his home and visiting his grandparents. "He was a little wild," Hahn said. "He liked to show off. He always talked about how he got in trouble at school." HOUSTONAustralian puts in word for Neil Armstrong That's one small word for astronaut Neil Armstrong, one giant revision for grammar sticklers everywhere. An Australian computer programmer says he found the missing "a" from Armstrong's famous first words from the moon in 1969, when the world heard the phrase, "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." The Houston Chronicle reported the story Saturday. Some historians and critics have dogged Armstrong for not saying the grammatically correct, "One small step for a man ..." in the version he transmitted to NASA's Mission Control. Without the missing "a," Armstrong essentially said, "One small step for mankind, one giant leap for mankind." The famous astronaut has maintained he intended to say it properly and believes he did. Thanks to some high-tech sound-editing software, computer programmer Peter Shann Ford might have proved Armstrong right. TBILISI, GEORGIARussians stop troop pullouts in spy dispute Russia suspended plans for further troops withdrawals from the former Soviet republic of Georgia on Saturday after the arrest of four Russian military officers accused of spying. Even before Wednesday's arrest of the officers, ties between Tbilisi and Moscow were strained over Georgia's bid to join NATO and allegations Russia is backing separatists in the provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Russia has recalled its ambassador, evacuated some diplomats and their families and issued a formal protest to the United Nations. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov has denounced Georgia as a "bandit" state.